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| "Mope" | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|
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| Single by Bloodhound Gang | ||||
| from the album Hooray for Boobies | ||||
| Released | September 5, 2000 | |||
| Recorded | 1999 | |||
| Genre | ||||
| Length | 4:36 | |||
| Label | ||||
| Songwriters |
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| Bloodhound Gang singles chronology | ||||
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"Mope" is a song by American comedy rock band Bloodhound Gang, released in September 2000 as the fourth single from their third studio album Hooray for Boobies. The song contains numerous samples such as "Rock Me Amadeus" by Falco, "Relax" by Frankie Goes to Hollywood, "For Whom the Bell Tolls" by Metallica, the Pac-Man theme song, and Homer Simpson shouting "holy macaroni" from the "Treehouse of Horror VI" episode of The Simpsons. A music video for the single was released in June 2000.
Single track listing
[edit]- "Mope" (The Bloodhound Gang Mix)
- "Mope" (The Pet Shop Boys 7" Remix)
- "Mope" (The Swamp Remix)
- "Fire Water Burn" (The Bloodhound Gang Remix)
The single also includes the "Cousin Mike" version of the music video for "The Ballad of Chasey Lain", and has track 6 listed as "Tic Tac Toe – Remus Pops Jefferson Game" which is a tic-tac-toe board design on the CD itself, with the center hole representing the first move. In the liner notes, the listener is encouraged to post the CD to Remus Pops Jefferson if they have no-one to play with, and a postal address is included.
Charts
[edit]| Chart (2000) | Peak position |
|---|---|
| Belgium (Ultratop 50 Flanders)[1] | 49 |
| Germany (GfK)[2] | 34 |
| Sweden (Sverigetopplistan)[3] | 56 |
| Switzerland (Schweizer Hitparade)[4] | 77 |
References
[edit]- ^ "Bloodhound Gang – Mope" (in Dutch). Ultratop 50.
- ^ "Bloodhound Gang – Mope" (in German). GfK Entertainment charts.
- ^ "Bloodhound Gang – Mope". Singles Top 100.
- ^ "Bloodhound Gang – Mope". Swiss Singles Chart.
Background
Album context
"Mope" appears on Bloodhound Gang's third studio album, Hooray for Boobies, released on October 4, 1999, in the United Kingdom and February 29, 2000, in the United States by Geffen Records. The US release was delayed due to legal concerns over the album's explicit cover art and title.[3][4] The album represents a pivotal point in the band's career, achieving platinum certification in multiple countries and selling over four million copies worldwide, propelled by hits like "The Bad Touch" that introduced their irreverent style to a broader audience.[5] Formed in 1992 in Quakertown, Pennsylvania, by Jimmy Pop and other local musicians, Bloodhound Gang initially explored hip-hop before evolving into a comedy rock outfit blending rap, punk, and satire to critique pop culture and societal norms.[6] This shift was evident in Hooray for Boobies, their second major-label release after the 1996 album One Fierce Beer Coaster, which had modest success but lacked the international breakthrough of its successor.[7] The album's content revolves around comedic, sexually explicit humor, with a thematic focus on breasts—reflected in the title and tracks like "The Ballad of Chasey Lain"—while satirizing celebrity culture, media, and male adolescence through provocative skits and lyrics.[5][8] Within this context, "Mope" was released as a single from Hooray for Boobies on September 5, 2000, following previous releases including "The Bad Touch" (1999), "Foxtrot Uniform Charlie Kilo" (2000), and "The Ballad of Chasey Lain" (2000).[9] The track's placement late in the singles rollout capitalized on the album's established momentum, contributing to its chart performance in Europe and further solidifying the band's mainstream appeal.[10]Writing and recording
"Mope" was primarily written by Jimmy Pop Ali (James Franks), who composed the music, with lyrics co-written by Jimmy Pop and DJ Q-Ball during 1999. The track embodies the Bloodhound Gang's signature humorous style and reliance on sampling, drawing from the band's established approach to blending rap-rock with pop culture references. It was recorded at Dome Studios in Royersford, Pennsylvania, as part of the broader sessions for the album Hooray for Boobies, which took place between 1998 and 1999. The production was handled by Jimmy Pop and Richard Gavalis, with Gavalis also serving as engineer, editor, and mixer. The recording featured the band's lineup at the time: Jimmy Pop on vocals, synthesizer, sampler, and keyboards; Lüpüs Thünder on guitar; DJ Q-Ball on scratches; Evil Jared Hasselhoff on bass; and Spanky G on drums. Mope's extensive use of samples—over a dozen from sources like Falco's "Rock Me Amadeus" and Metallica's "For Whom the Bell Tolls"—highlighted the band's creative experimentation, though securing clearances for such elements added complexity to the production process.Composition
Musical structure
"Mope" is classified as comedy rock and alternative rock, incorporating hip hop and electronic influences through its eclectic sampling and production style.[2][11] The track runs for 4:36, set in the key of C♯ minor with a tempo of 112 beats per minute.[12][13][14] The song follows a verse-chorus form, beginning with an intro built on layered samples that establish its mashup aesthetic. This leads into verses and pre-choruses that build tension, followed by anthemic choruses emphasizing the hook. A bridge midway through intensifies the arrangement with additional stacked samples, creating a climactic shift before returning to the chorus structure. The track concludes with an outro that fades out, gradually reducing elements to echo the introductory samples.[15] Instrumentation centers on synthesizers providing melodic and atmospheric layers, alongside drum machines driving the rhythmic foundation with electronic beats. Electric guitar riffs, drawn from rock samples, add gritty texture, while DJ scratching introduces hip hop flair through turntable effects. This combination results in a cohesive mashup that blends rock, rap, and pop samples into a unified, high-energy composition.[11][16][2]Lyrics and themes
The lyrics of "Mope" exemplify the Bloodhound Gang's crude, comedic style, characterized by Jimmy Pop Ali's rapid-fire rapping interspersed with spoken-word asides that amplify the humorous delivery.[17] The song's content revolves around profound boredom and laziness, depicting a day spent moping at home while seeking trivial distractions to combat idleness.[18] Key themes include satire of pornography, celebrity obsession, and everyday awkwardness, all framed through male sexual frustration and self-deprecation.[19] The chorus reinforces the "loser" archetype with its insistent repetition: "I'm a mope, I'm a mope, I'm a mope, I'm a mope."[17] Notable lines evoke masturbation and relational failures, such as "Deep throat a whole Nutty Buddy" and "When you wanna cum, I'm mighty tighty whitey and I'm smugglin' plums," while weaving in pop culture references to Golden Girls, Cops, Tori Spelling's eyes, and Party of Five parents to highlight cultural fixation and banal existence.[17] These elements collectively parody the stagnant, overstimulated routine of 1990s youth disenchantment.[19]Samples and interpolations
"Mope" extensively incorporates samples and interpolations from a diverse array of sources, blending elements from 1980s pop, heavy metal, video games, and television to create its eclectic sound. This approach draws from multiple genres and media, enhancing the song's comedic and satirical tone.[16] The intro features a direct sample from "Rock Me Amadeus (Salieri Mix)" by Falco, released in 1985, where the Austrian singer's distinctive harpsichord riff and vocal hook are layered over the opening beats, setting a playful, anachronistic mood.[20] In the chorus, the melody interpolates the iconic synth line from "Relax" by Frankie Goes to Hollywood, originally from their 1983 album Welcome to the Pleasuredome, recreating the tension-building progression to underscore the song's humorous lyrics on sexual frustration.[21] The bass riff throughout the track samples the opening groove from Metallica's "For Whom the Bell Tolls," from their 1984 album Ride the Lightning, providing a heavy, driving foundation that contrasts with the lighter pop elements.[22] During the bridge, the Pac-Man theme composed by Toshio Kai in 1980 is integrated, with its chiptune melody woven into a skit segment featuring band members role-playing as the video game character, adding a layer of nostalgic absurdity.[23] Additionally, the song includes a vocal sample of Homer Simpson's exclamation "Holy macaroni!" from the 1995 episode "Treehouse of Horror VI" of The Simpsons, inserted during a comedic breakdown to punctuate the chaotic narrative.[24] These borrowings reflect a deliberate artistic choice in sampling, drawing from culturally significant works to amplify the track's irreverent style.Release and promotion
Single release
"Mope" was released as a single on September 5, 2000, by Geffen Records exclusively in Europe as the fourth single from the album Hooray for Boobies.[2][25] It was not issued as a commercial single in the United States, where distribution was limited to promotional copies on CD and vinyl.[11] This release formed part of the broader promotional efforts for Hooray for Boobies after the album attained platinum certification from the RIAA. The single appeared in multiple physical formats, including the standard enhanced CD maxi-single (Geffen 497 378-2) and a cardboard sleeve CD single (Geffen 497 377-2), both targeted at the European market.[25][26] Vinyl editions included a 12" promotional 45 RPM record (Geffen BHGPR02) in Europe and a limited 7" single (Jimmy Franks Recording Company BG-008) in the US, the latter featuring a unique tic-tac-toe game design on the packaging with a fictional address for "Remus 'Pops' Jefferson" at 1726 Ruston Lane, Kissimmee, FL 34746, USA, encouraging interactive play.[27] Digital distribution of the single tracks became available in subsequent years through platforms offering the album's content. B-sides on the European CD maxi-single comprised several remixes of "Mope," including "Mope (The Pet Shop Boys 7" Remix)" at 3:24 and "Mope (The Swamp Remix)" at 4:16, alongside "Mope (The Bloodhound Gang Mix)" at 4:37, which served as the radio edit version.[25] An additional non-album track, "Fire Water Burn (The Bloodhound Gang Remix)" at 4:42—a reworking of the band's 1996 hit—was also included to appeal to existing fans.[25] The enhanced CD further contained QuickTime video files, such as the music video for "The Ballad of Chasey Lain" and short clips from other album tracks.[25]Music video
The music video for "Mope" was directed by Michael Alperowitz, credited as Cousin Mike, and released in June 2000.[28] The video's central concept portrays the Bloodhound Gang members as bumbling adult film actors filming on a low-budget porn set, using over-the-top humor and absurdity to satirize the adult entertainment industry.[29] It incorporates comedic elements like staged sex scenes with ridiculous props, such as oversized condoms and fake bodily fluids, along with cameos from adult film performers, all of which amplify the song's themes of laziness, boredom, and sexual inadequacy.[29] Filmed in Los Angeles, the approximately four-minute video aligns with the track's runtime and features the band navigating chaotic production mishaps, including wardrobe malfunctions and inept directing, to underscore the satirical tone.[29] The video received rotation on MTV, including a censored version to comply with broadcast standards, and helped generate buzz for the single across Europe, where "Mope" achieved moderate chart success, peaking at number 34 on the German Singles Chart.[30][31]Reception
Critical reception
"Mope" received generally positive critical reception for its humorous lyrics and creative sampling, though some reviewers found its juvenile tone off-putting yet intentional in its comedic intent. AllMusic's Stephen Thomas Erlewine praised the album Hooray for Boobies—from which "Mope" is drawn—for its defiantly stupid blend of rap-metal and satirical elements, describing the band's approach as charmingly vulgar and focused on dirty jokes that appeal to adolescent humor, even if the overall execution plays to the lowest common denominator.[4] The track's mash-up of samples from Frankie Goes to Hollywood's "Relax" and Metallica's "For Whom the Bell Tolls" was highlighted as a key strength, contributing to the song's "mash-up madness" and post-modern edge.[4] Critics like those at Punknews.org noted "Mope" as a "pretty entertaining" single that effectively incorporates its samples into a catchy, comedic package, though the album's broader lyrical content drew criticism for being overly simplistic and repetitive in its sex- and bodily function-themed gags.[32] Erlewine echoed this by pointing out the obviousness of the humor, such as in related tracks with mock-stalker narratives that fail to land as sharply satirical, but acknowledged the band's unapologetic silliness as part of its appeal.[4] In terms of legacy, "Mope" has been recognized as a fan favorite within the band's discography, contributing to Bloodhound Gang's cult following through its embodiment of 2000s novelty rock satire. The song garnered no major awards but remains a staple in discussions of the era's comedic alternative music, often cited for its enduring humorous impact.[32]Commercial performance
"Mope" achieved moderate commercial success primarily in Europe following its release as a single in September 2000. In Belgium, it peaked at number 49 on the Ultratop 50 chart, spending one week in the top 50.[33] The track reached number 34 on Germany's Media Control Charts, where it charted for eight weeks. In Sweden, "Mope" entered the Sverigetopplistan at number 56 for one week, while in Switzerland, it attained a peak of number 77 on the Schweizer Hitparade over seven weeks.[34] The single did not chart on the US Billboard Hot 100 but garnered airplay on alternative rock radio formats. The accompanying album Hooray for Boobies bolstered the track's exposure, achieving platinum certifications in multiple countries including Australia, Austria, Canada, and Germany, as well as gold certification in the United States by the RIAA.[35] In the 2010s, "Mope" saw a resurgence in popularity through digital streaming and sales on platforms like Spotify, accumulating tens of millions of streams driven by nostalgic interest and viral sharing of its music video.[36]Track listing
| No. | Title | Length |
|---|---|---|
| 1 | "Mope" (The Bloodhound Gang Mix) | 4:37 |
| 2 | "Mope" (The Pet Shop Boys 7" Remix) | 3:24 |
| 3 | "Mope" (The Swamp Remix) | 4:16 |
| 4 | "Fire Water Burn" (The Bloodhound Gang Remix) | 4:42 |

